Digital Verbum Edition
How do our current notions of the workings of the universe fit with our deepest convictions about its meaning and value? From religion, we grasp the world as a created, given gift. From science, we apprehend it as evolving, in process, changing. How do we bring these apprehensions together? Or can we? Is our impulse to find the two complementary: creation and evolution? Or is it to find them contradictory: creation or evolution?
The way in which we answer these questions carries personal and intellectual consequences. It will constitute the first piece in a worldview within which we order our religious beliefs and scientific judgments.
In the Logos edition, all Scripture passages in Creationism and the Conflict over Evolution are tagged and appear on mouseover, and all Scripture passages link to your favorite Bible translation in your library. With Logos’ advanced features, you can perform powerful searches by topic or Scripture reference—finding, for example, every mention of “evolution” or “conflict.”
Save more when you purchase this book as part of the Cascade Companions Series (15 vols.).
“Augustine’s methodological principle, crede ut intelligas, ‘Believe in order that you may understand,’ became a theological mantra of the tradition.7 In his view, trust in a reliable source (faith) is an essential condition of understanding. Because God is the author of truth, faith and reason are complementary. Augustine’s ‘divine illumination epistemology’ brings God into relation with science, not as an alternative explanation to what scientists propose about the world but at the root of their understanding of the world. God illumines the human mind, making the world and divine truths intelligible. All knowledge is from God. In knowing what is, human beings come to know what God already knows.” (Pages 46–47)
“In naming the supernatural as the cause of natural events, creationists confuse what Thomas Aquinas distinguished as primary and secondary causality. Secondary causality refers to the finite system of laws governing the universe. Secondary causality is created. It is the condition for the possibility of the verifiable explanations that contribute cumulatively to our knowledge of reality and that serve as the ground for further prediction and experimentation. Primary causality refers to the ultimate source for secondary causality, to God as the source of the whole, to the ultimate source for the existence of the universe and its intelligibility. Primary causality is infinite, not finite. As the primary cause, God operates not by ‘making things’ or species but as the ground of being itself.” (Pages 112–113)
The scientific failures of ‘Intelligent Design’ and other forms of creationism have been detailed in dozens of books, scores of articles, and in a handful of spectacular court cases. What Tatha Wiley adds to this mix is a provocative and highly readable analysis of the theological failings of today’s creationist movement. It will surprise those who assume that creationism is rooted in Christian tradition, and it will challenge those who believe that the biblical narrative is hopelessly at odds with modern science.
—Kenneth R. Miller, professor of biology, Brown University, author of Finding Darwin’s God and Only a Theory
Tatha Wiley is the author of Original Sin: Origins, Developments, Contemporary Meaning and Paul and the Gentile Women: Reframing Galatians. She is editor of Thinking of Christ: Proclamation, Explanation, Meaning and the series Engaging Theology: Catholic Perspectives. She teaches theology at the University of St. Thomas and the College of St. Catherine in St. Paul, Minnesota.
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